Introduction
to weight loss
Whether
you are trying to lose 5 pounds or more than 50, the same principles determine
how much weight you lose and how fast your weight loss will occur. Remembering
the following simple guidelines and putting them into practice can lead to
weight loss without the aid of any special diet plans, books, or medications.
Our body weight is determined by the
amount of energy that we take in as food and the amount of energy we expend in
the activities of our day. Energy is measured in
calories. If your weight remains constant, you are probably taking in the same
amount of calories that you burn each day. If you're slowly gaining weight over
time, it is likely that your caloric intake is greater than the number of
calories you burn through your daily activities.
Everyone
is in control of the amount of food he or she consumes each day, so our intake
of calories is something we can control. To a major degree, we can also control
our output of energy, or the number of calories we burn each day. The number of
calories we burn each day is dependent upon
· our basal metabolic
rate (BMR), the number of calories we burn per hour simply by being alive and
maintaining body functions
· and our level of
physical activity.
For some people, due to genetic (inherited) factors or
other conditions, the resting metabolic rate (BMR) can be slightly higher or
lower than average. Our weight also plays a role in determining how many
calories we burn at rest -- the more calories are required
to maintain your body in its present state, the greater your body weight. A 100-pound person
requires less energy (food) to maintain body weight than a person who weighs
200 pounds.
Lifestyle
and work habits partially determine how many calories we need each day. Someone
whose job involves heavy physical labor will naturally burn more calories in a
day than someone who sits at a desk most of the day (a sedentary job). For
people who do not have jobs that require intense physical activity, exercise or increased physical
activity can increase the number of calories burned.
As
a rough estimate, an average woman 31-50 years of age who leads a sedentary
lifestyle needs about 1,800 calories per day to maintain a normal weight. A man
of the same age requires about 2,200 calories. Participating in a moderate
level of physical activity (exercising three to five days per week) requires
about 200 additional calories per day.
How
do you lose weight?
The
most effective method for weight loss is reducing the number of calories you
consume while increasing the number of calories you burn through physical
activity. To lose 1 pound, you need an expenditure of approximately 3,500
calories. You can achieve this either by cutting back on your food intake, by
increasing physical activity, or ideally, by doing both.
For
example, if you consume 500 extra calories per day for one week without
changing your activity level, you will gain 1 pound in weight (seven days
multiplied by 500 calories equals 3,500 calories, or the number of calories
resulting in a 1-poundweight gain). Likewise, if you eat 500 fewer calories each day
for a week or burn 500 calories per day through exercise for one week, you will
lose 1 pound.
How
fast should you expect to lose weight?
Most experts agree that a safe, healthy rate of weight
loss is one to 1 ½ pounds per week. Modification of eating habits along
with regular exercise is the most effective way to lose weight over the long
term. It is also the ideal way to ensure that the weight stays off.
Starvation
diets may result in rapid weight loss, but this weight loss is almost
impossible to maintain for most people. When food intake is severely restricted
(below approximately 1,200 calories per day), the body begins to adapt to this
state of poor nutrition by
reducing its metabolic rate, potentially making it even more difficult to lose
weight. It is also possible to experience hunger pangs, bouts ofhypoglycemia, headaches,
and mood changes from overly stringent dieting.
These symptoms can result in binge eating and weight gain. Since a highly
restrictive diet is almost impossible to maintain for a long time, people who
attempt to starve themselves thin often start to gain weight again when they
stop dieting.
Let's
look at an example of a successful no-diet weight loss program.
A
45-year-old woman complains that she has gradually put on 12 pounds over the
past year. In the last month, she's faced a stressful work deadline and added
another 4 pounds to her frame.
This
individual's goal is to lose the 16 pounds she has gained. Since her weight has
been gradually increasing, she knows that she is consuming more calories than
she is burning, especially with her sedentary job. She decides that a weight
loss of 1 pound per week (equal to a deficit of about 3,500 calories, or
cutting 500 calories per day) would be acceptable and would allow her to reach
her goal in about four months.
She
decides to make some changes that will allow her to cut back an average of 250
calories per day.
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